OCZ also has its fair
share of high-priced SSDs, but its new Onyx line is looking to
give a speed boost to enthusiasts on a budget. The new Onyx SSD has an MSRP below $100 (we're guessing $99.95) – the catch is that the low price tag only gets
you 30GB of storage capacity.

Read speeds for the budget SSD are 125
MB/sec while write speeds are on the low side at 70 MB/sec.

“As new technologies become
available, OCZ continues to expand both our enterprise and consumer
SSD lines, and one of our goals is to make SSDs more affordable to
end-users. Our new Onyx series SSD does exactly that and is a perfect
solution for netbooks, laptops, or home desktop PCs,” stated OCZ
CEO Ryan Petersen. “Designed to offer the best of both worlds, the
new OCZ Onyx SSD delivers the speed and reliability of solid state
storage to mainstream consumers at an aggressive price point that
makes the technology more accessible to customers who want to take
advantage of all the benefits of the SSDs without incurring the high
cost normally associated with the solution.”

The 30GB Onyx SSD has 64MB of cache
onboard, a MTBF of 1.5 million hours, and carries a three-year
warranty.

For those of you that don't mind
dealing with rebates, you can already get a 30GB OCZ SSD for under
$100 that offers far better performance than the Onyx. Tiger Direct
currently has the 30GB
OCZ Agility SSD for $80 after a $40
mail-in rebate [PDF].

Comments

Threshold

Username

Password

remember me

This article is over a month old, voting and posting comments is disabled

I may sound wild and crazy but it is actually possible to install applications to a different drive than your boot drive!

In other words use the 30 GB SSD for the OS and the apps you use the most and put the secondary stuff on a different drive. I'm running my system with a 80 GB Intel SSD and I have the OS, the main apps and the some 50 GB worth of data for a special project. Getting that SSD is the best upgrade I have ever made and it replaced a 10,000 rpm disc so if you're replacing a laptop drive difference will be even larger.

"This is about the Internet. Everything on the Internet is encrypted. This is not a BlackBerry-only issue. If they can't deal with the Internet, they should shut it off." -- RIM co-CEO Michael Lazaridis